Ullmann's encyclopedia of industrial chemistry

Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry is a reference work related to industrial chemistry. As of 2016 it is in its 7th edition. This reference work provides the most current and trustworthy knowledge in everything that relates to the chemical industry, including processes, chemicals, products, analytical chemistry, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and much more.

Access

Ullmann's encyclopedia of industrial chemistry is part of Wiley Online Library.

Make sure you are connected to the UGent network via Athena. Search for the reference work in the Ghent University library catalogue lib.ugent.be. Click on the link 'view online' and you have access to full text documents in Ullmann's encyclopedia of industrial chemistry.

Search Tips

Basic search: enter your search term in the search bar and click on the magnifying glass. You can refine your search result by using the filters (publication type, publication date, access status, subjects, ...) or by using the 'Refine search' option above your results. By using 'Refine search' you can, obviously, refine your search but also check your 'search history' and 'saved searches'. To save your searches you have to log in.

Advanced search: using Advanced search you can use more than 1 search term, select their context (anywhere, title, author, keywords, ...) and select the publication date.

Search Tips:

You can use the Boolean operators AND (also +  or &), OR and NOT (also -) within search fields. These operators must be entered in UPPERCASE to work.  

If more than one term is entered, and no operators are specified, terms are searched using AND.  To search for a phrase, put the terms in quotes. For example, 'spinal cord' searches spinal AND cord while 'spinal cord' finds this exact phrase.   

Wildcards: Use a question mark (?) in a search term to represent a single character ('wom?n' finds women or woman). Use an asterisk (*) to represent zero or more characters. For example, 'plant* ' finds all words with that root (plant, plants & planting) while 'an*mia' finds variants with one or more letters (anemia & anaemia). Wildcards CANNOT be used at the start of a search term (*tension) or when searching for phrases in quotes ("tobacco smok*”). 

Author Search: Author names may appear with full first names or just initials. Place author names in quotes to find a specific name and its variants. For example, “John Smith” finds articles by John Smith, John K Smith and John Colby-Smith while “J Smith” finds articles by J Smith, JR Smith, John Smith and Julie Smith.

Export

To export a citation to EndNote: select an article. Underneath the title of the article, click on 'Tools', choose 'Export Citation'. In 'Format': choose 'EndNote', in 'Type of import': choose 'Direct import', click on 'Download'. In the pop-up, click on 'Open'. Your citation is now downloaded in EndNote. Don't forget: in order to use EndNote via Athena, you need to start all your other applications (browser Internet Explorer11, Word, ...) via Athena as well.

Alerts & saving searches

More information

lib.fea@ugent.be

 

Source reference

 

 

More tips

Translated tip


Last modified Jan. 24, 2024, 6:30 p.m.